Could you tell if your favourite song was made with AI? The viral ‘Papaoutai’ cover controversy suggests not
Publish Date: 2026-03-10 13:14:00
Source Domain: theconversation.com
- A viral Afro-soul cover of the 2013 song “Papaoutai” by Stromae gained massive popularity, but it was created using artificial intelligence (AI), according to the French music streaming service Deezer.
- This raises questions about identifying and disclosing when generative AI is used in music production, as listeners can’t easily tell the difference between AI-generated and human-authored music.
- The cover version generated almost 80 million streams on Spotify within months of its release, attributed to various individuals and labels without clear involvement from original artist Stromae.
- The inability to distinguish AI-generated music poses ethical challenges, as 73% of people surveyed by Deezer-Ipsos consider it unethical for AI companies to generate new music without consent from original artists.
- Emotional responses vary from initial praise to disappointment when AI-generated origins are revealed, questioning the moral implications of supporting AI-generated content.
- The Afro-soul version of “Papaoutai” also sparked debates on the legality and ethics of remixing through AI, contrasting it with traditional music remix culture.
- The case underscores the broader issues surrounding AI’s role in music production and the responsibility of platforms to provide clear disclosures and respect original artists’ rights.